Formats

(New page: ==Format Support== We wish to provide support for as many file formats as possible. As for specific formats, however, the proprietary nature of many file types makes it impossible to mak...)

==Format Support at University of Alabama Libraries Digital Services==

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All following information applies only to content for which we can legally provide open access, and for which we have digital management rights (see the [[Digital Services Permission Agreement]]).

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We wish to provide support for as many file formats as possible. As for specific formats, however, the proprietary nature of many file types makes it impossible to make guarantees. Put simply, our policy for file formats is:

We wish to provide support for as many file formats as possible. As for specific formats, however, the proprietary nature of many file types makes it impossible to make guarantees. Put simply, our policy for file formats is:

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* Content within our collections for which we have digital management rights and for which accessibility rights are open, will be retrievable.

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* While the file can be rendered using University of Alabama Libraries approved and current hardware and software, it will be made retrievable.

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* We will recognize as many files' formats as possible.

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* We will recognize as many files' formats as possible.

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* We will support as many known file formats as possible.

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* We will support as many known file formats as possible.

Incoming born-digital content is assigned one of the following categories:

Incoming born-digital content is assigned one of the following categories:

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* supported: we fully support the format

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* supported: we fully support the format. With continued funding and support, we can offer Level I preservation.

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* known: we can recognize the format, but cannot guarantee full support

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* known: we can recognize the format, but cannot guarantee full support. Level II preservation support is available.

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* unsupported: we cannot recognize the format; these will be listed as "application/octet-stream," aka Unknown

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* unsupported: we cannot recognize the format.

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(Levels of preservation support are described in [[Preservation]].)

By "support" we mean "make usable in the future, using whatever combination of techniques (such as migration, emulation, etc.) is appropriate given the context of need." For supported formats, we might choose to bulk-transform files from a current format version to a future one, for instance. But we can't predict which services will be necessary down the road, so we'll continually monitor formats and techniques to ensure we can accommodate needs as they arise.

By "support" we mean "make usable in the future, using whatever combination of techniques (such as migration, emulation, etc.) is appropriate given the context of need." For supported formats, we might choose to bulk-transform files from a current format version to a future one, for instance. But we can't predict which services will be necessary down the road, so we'll continually monitor formats and techniques to ensure we can accommodate needs as they arise.

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'''What to do if your format isn't recognized'''

'''What to do if your format isn't recognized'''

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We understand that there are always more formats to consider, and we would appreciate your help in identifying and studying the suitability of support for formats you care about. If we can't identify a format, we will record it as "unknown," aka "application/octet-stream," but we would like to keep the percentage of supported format materials as high as possible.

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'''Format Reference Collection'''

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Consider digitizing your content in one of the supported formats. We understand that there are always more formats to consider, and we would appreciate your help in identifying and studying the suitability of support for formats you care about. We will try to keep the percentage of supported format materials as high as possible.

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In the table below, MIME type is the Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) type identifier. Description is what most people use as the name for the format. Extensions are typical file name extensions (the part after the dot, e.g. the extension for "index.html" is "html"). These are not case-sensitive, so either "sample.XML" or "sample.xml" will be recognized as XML. Level is our support for each format:

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* supported: we fully support the format

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'''Format Reference Table'''

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* known: we can recognize the format, but cannot guarantee full support

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* unknown: we cannot recognize a format; these will be listed a "application/octet-stream," aka Unknown

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In the table below, MIME type is the Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) type identifier. Description is what most people use as the name for the format. Extensions are typical file name extensions (the part after the dot, e.g. the extension for "index.html" is "html"). These are not case-sensitive, so either "sample.XML" or "sample.xml" will be recognized as XML.

Revision as of 09:19, 12 May 2010

Format Support at University of Alabama Libraries Digital Services

All following information applies only to content for which we can legally provide open access, and for which we have digital management rights (see the Digital Services Permission Agreement).

We wish to provide support for as many file formats as possible. As for specific formats, however, the proprietary nature of many file types makes it impossible to make guarantees. Put simply, our policy for file formats is:

While the file can be rendered using University of Alabama Libraries approved and current hardware and software, it will be made retrievable.

We will recognize as many files' formats as possible.

We will support as many known file formats as possible.

Incoming born-digital content is assigned one of the following categories:

supported: we fully support the format. With continued funding and support, we can offer Level I preservation.

known: we can recognize the format, but cannot guarantee full support. Level II preservation support is available.

By "support" we mean "make usable in the future, using whatever combination of techniques (such as migration, emulation, etc.) is appropriate given the context of need." For supported formats, we might choose to bulk-transform files from a current format version to a future one, for instance. But we can't predict which services will be necessary down the road, so we'll continually monitor formats and techniques to ensure we can accommodate needs as they arise.

In the meantime, we can choose to "support" a format if we can gather enough documentation to capture how the format works. Proprietary formats for which these materials are not publicly available will be made available online until no longer renderable without emulation, using University of Alabama Libraries current hardware and software.
It is possible that for extremely popular but proprietary formats (such as Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint), future tools will enable the reformatting of this content into better-supported alternatives. If funding and tools become available prior to obsolesence of this content, we will make every effort to migrate the materials and continue support.
Even so, we cannot guarantee this level of service at this point, so we will still list these formats as "known," not "supported."

What to do if your format isn't recognized

Consider digitizing your content in one of the supported formats. We understand that there are always more formats to consider, and we would appreciate your help in identifying and studying the suitability of support for formats you care about. We will try to keep the percentage of supported format materials as high as possible.

Format Reference Table

In the table below, MIME type is the Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) type identifier. Description is what most people use as the name for the format. Extensions are typical file name extensions (the part after the dot, e.g. the extension for "index.html" is "html"). These are not case-sensitive, so either "sample.XML" or "sample.xml" will be recognized as XML.